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By engadget, on February 15th, 2012%
 Sammy isn’t taking its foot off the handset-making accelerator anytime soon. The company announced it’s bringing three of its galactic machines along for an Indian ride, and while we’d previously met the dual-SIM packin’ pair , the Galaxy Ace Duos is seeing life for the first time in its double-threat form. Sporting the same 832MHz CPU as its siblings, as well as a 3.5-inch display, 1650mAh battery and GSM / CDMA capabilities, the newcomer isn’t much more powerful, but at least offers more screen real estate and an extra pinch of juice to get you through the day . . . → Read More: Samsung intros trifecta of Galaxy Duos in India, new Ace included
By MobileCrunch, on December 23rd, 2011%
 India is getting a second government-sponsored tablet. . . . → Read More: Ubislate 7: India Gets Second Low-Cost Tablet – For US$57
By engadget, on December 23rd, 2011%
 Is your cellphone bad for your health? India’s government seems to think so, because it’s planning a law that will require all phones to display how much electro-magnetic radiation they generate. Radiation is measured in SAR ( Specific Absorption Rate ) and the Indian limit has been lowered to match the USA’s 1.6W/kg, whereas before it followed the European ceiling of 2W/kg. . . . → Read More: India: cellphones generate radiation, send a text message instead
By engadget, on August 31st, 2011%
 Never count the little guy out. It seems Sprint’s ramping up its game in preparation for the possible three-way carrier brawl lurking just out of view. The Hesse-led company revealed a coming change to its ETF for customers with smartphones, tabs, laptops and netbooks . . . → Read More: Sprint bumps early termination fee to $350, wants to play with the big boys
By engadget, on July 21st, 2011%
By Boy Genius, on June 10th, 2011%
 RIM has announced that the company’s first BlackBerry tablet will go on sale in sixteen new countries over the next month, including Australia, France, Germany, India, the United Arab Emirates, and the United Kingdom. Its unclear if RIM has any carrier partners lined up or how much the device will retail for abroad. In the United States, Sprint most recently announced that it will begin selling the Wi-Fi PlayBook , and it also has plans to sell a 4G WiMAX version of the tablet this summer. Read . . . → Read More: BlackBerry PlayBook rolling out to 16 new countries soon
By engadget, on May 3rd, 2011%
No doubt still buzzing from hitting the 100 millionth download milestone back in March, Samsung is making it even easier for Apps customers to use the mobile/HDTV storefront — well, consumers in Europe and Asia, at least. . . . → Read More: Samsung makes it easier for you to buy stuff from its Apps store
By TiPb, on April 29th, 2011%
 iPad 2 just launched in Hong Kong, India, Israel, Korea, Macau, Malaysia, Philippines, Singapore, South Africa, Turkey and UAE today and despite Wi-Fi and unlocked 3G units being snuck in from North America and Europe for over a month already, it looks like the crowds are still coming out. Did you just get your new iPad 2 ? If so, if you’ve finished unboxing and you’re finally ready to go… you might just be wondering what you need to know and do next . . . → Read More: Did you get a new iPad 2 in Asia today? Here’s what you need next!
By engadget, on April 26th, 2011%
 Even if everyone and their dog in the US bought a cell phone, the total number of mobile users would still pale in comparison to China’s. The country is on the verge of becoming the first with 900 million cell phone owners, according to stats collected by the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology. The number of mobile subscribers reached 889 million at the end of March, up 30 million, or a modest 3.5 percent, from the previous quarter . . . → Read More: China approaches 900 million mobile phone users, India’s market is the fastest-growing
By engadget, on April 17th, 2011%
 Poor Nokia , between having to abandon its Symbian baby and hawk anachronistic wares at a Microsoft event, it’s had a pretty rough go of it recently. Now India’s Ministry of Home Affairs wants to block the launch of the company’s new push email service until a monitoring system can be put in place . . . → Read More: India wants to spy on Nokia users, BlackBerry fans no longer feel special
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